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FTC to pursue companies that expose customer data due to not patching Log4j

Jan, 04, 2022 Hi-network.com
Image: perinjo/ GETTY

The United States Federal Trade Commission has issued a warning that it will chase companies that do not remedy the vulnerability in the Java logging package Log4j.

"The FTC intends to use its full legal authority to pursue companies that fail to take?reasonable?steps to protect consumer data from exposure?as a result of Log4j,?or similar known vulnerabilities in the future," the agency said on Tuesday.

"Failure to identify and patch instances of this software may violate?the FTC Act."

The agency cited its$700 million settlement with Equifax in 2019 as an example of what could happen if customer data is exposed.

"The Log4j vulnerability is part of a broader set of structural issues.?It is?one of thousands of unheralded?but critically important?open-source?services that are used across a near-innumerable variety of internet companies," the FTC said.?

"These projects?are often created and maintained by volunteers, who don't?always have adequate resources and personnel for incident response and proactive maintenance even as their projects are critical to the internet economy.

"This overall dynamic is something the?FTC?will consider as we work to address the?root?issues that endanger user security."

Earlier on Tuesday, Microsoft said people might not be aware of how widespread the Log4Shell issue is in their environments, and warned that attempts to exploit it remained high to the end of 2021.

"At this juncture, customers should assume broad availability of exploit code and scanning capabilities to be a real and present danger to their environments," the software giant said.

"Due to the many software and services that are impacted and given the pace of updates, this is expected to have a long tail for remediation, requiring ongoing, sustainable vigilance."

Cloudflare warned last month it had detected activity related to the remote code exploit as early as December 1, which meant the vulnerability was in the wild for at least nine days before it was publicly disclosed.

more Log4j

Log4j zero-day: How to protect yourselfApache releases new 2.17.0 patchSecurity firm discovers new attack vector10 questions you need to be askingGovernments release Log4j advisorySo far, nearly half of corporate networks have been attackedUS: Hundreds of millions of devices at risk
  • Log4j zero-day: How to protect yourself
  • Apache releases new 2.17.0 patch
  • Security firm discovers new attack vector
  • 10 questions you need to be asking
  • Governments release Log4j advisory
  • So far, nearly half of corporate networks have been attacked
  • US: Hundreds of millions of devices at risk

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